buildout - using different python version

Buildout specifically supports this scenario. Each part in a buildout can use it's own python interpreter, or you can set one python interpreter globally for all parts. This defaults to the python used to run buildout.

To set the python interpreter used, set the python option to the name of a part that contains an executable option. This can be a part that builds a whole new python interpreter. Here is an example:

[buildout]
python = python
parts =
    python

[python]
recipe = zc.recipe.cmmi
url = http://www.python.org/ftp/python/2.6.6/Python-2.6.6.tgz
executable = ${buildout:directory}/parts/python/bin/python2.6
extra_options=
    --enable-unicode=ucs4
    --with-threads
    --with-readline

Any other parts in this buildout now will use the python 2.6 executable.

You may want to symlink the python script into the buildout bin/ directory as well; the following part would do that for you:

[pythonbin]
recipe = plone.recipe.command
command = ln -s ${python:executable} ${buildout:bin-directory}/python

Whichever python you use to do run the initial bootstrap.py is the one that will be used for your entire project. All paths will reference that specific python and the sitepackages for that specific python will be used.

This is one of the best things about buildout

This is a 32 bit python 2.6:

/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/2.6/bin/python2.6 boostrap.py

This is a 64 bit python 2.7:

/System/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/2.7/bin/python bootstrap.py

Now go look at the bin/ it created.

Then do your actual bin/buildout -c dev.cfg and look at the scripts in the bin. For my 32 bit example:

For the first one I see in my django file:

#!/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/2.6/Resources/Python.app/Contents/MacOS/Python
...
'/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/2.6/lib/python2.6/site-packages',

The accepted answer says you need to compile a whole python. This is not needed nor advised, though it would mean you have a completely isolated sitepackages. But there are easier ways to tell buildout to not include the sitepackages.

The answer from esaelPsnoroMoN is actually correct, but s/he didn't describe the solution very well. (I ignored it myself before)